Spawn of e said:![]()
This is low grade wonderlance stuff.
Most definitely not High Speed Gear running here.Spawn of e said:![]()
This is low grade wonderlance stuff.
Elagabalus said:Spawn of e said:![]()
This is low grade wonderlance stuff.
My thoughts, exactly
ETA: Or really high grade "thehog" in full suicide-by-mod mode !!
Glenn_Wilson said:Most definitely not High Speed Gear running here.Spawn of e said:![]()
This is low grade wonderlance stuff.
@ Tonton Yeah my boy Trump Hu? I could tell from the beginning that this was a erected poll for fun but many here did not. You guys bought into all this and started hammering away the defense against a perceived attack. It was typical for the defenders. I have to admit it was funny watching and reading all this.
The OP got LeModerated and banninated all in the same day. I guess the OP erection of the Poll did not go as expected.blutto said:Glenn_Wilson said:Most definitely not High Speed Gear running here.Spawn of e said:![]()
This is low grade wonderlance stuff.
@ Tonton Yeah my boy Trump Hu? I could tell from the beginning that this was a erected poll for fun but many here did not. You guys bought into all this and started hammering away the defense against a perceived attack. It was typical for the defenders. I have to admit it was funny watching and reading all this.
...so fun was had by all....now how about some suitable chilled beverages...![]()
Cheers
Libertine Seguros said:- People dope to run 100m. The only thing that will change with drastic reduction in GT stage length is the types of dope that are most effective will possibly change. One of the most notorious doped performances of all time was in a stage that was barely 40km long and wasn't a time trial either. And then the abilities of the GTs to cover the country will massively reduce and you throw in huge transfers. Maybe the only way to introduce what you want is Paris-Dakar style "liaison sections", where the riders will cover a set distance, but only be timed over a particular part of it, so the neutral section is like 100km long then it's an all out war for the last 50km timed racing. I'd hate that.
- I'd say there are a lot who paid worse than Armstrong for the excesses of the era. Jiménez, Vandenbroucke, Pantani, Halupczok...
Libertine Seguros said:- People dope to run 100m. The only thing that will change with drastic reduction in GT stage length is the types of dope that are most effective will possibly change. One of the most notorious doped performances of all time was in a stage that was barely 40km long and wasn't a time trial either. And then the abilities of the GTs to cover the country will massively reduce and you throw in huge transfers. Maybe the only way to introduce what you want is Paris-Dakar style "liaison sections", where the riders will cover a set distance, but only be timed over a particular part of it, so the neutral section is like 100km long then it's an all out war for the last 50km timed racing. I'd hate that.
- I'd say there are a lot who paid worse than Armstrong for the excesses of the era. Jiménez, Vandenbroucke, Pantani, Halupczok...
Glenn_Wilson said:The OP got LeModerated and banninated all in the same day. I guess the OP erection of the Poll did not go as expected.blutto said:Glenn_Wilson said:Most definitely not High Speed Gear running here.Spawn of e said:![]()
This is low grade wonderlance stuff.
@ Tonton Yeah my boy Trump Hu? I could tell from the beginning that this was a erected poll for fun but many here did not. You guys bought into all this and started hammering away the defense against a perceived attack. It was typical for the defenders. I have to admit it was funny watching and reading all this.
...so fun was had by all....now how about some suitable chilled beverages...![]()
Cheers
chapeau, post of the week.Maxiton said:...
I'd hate it, too. What you describe is not what I have in mind.
It's true that riders today dope for short stages and one-day races, but that's because doping is endemic in the culture and history of the sport. Part of the reason it's endemic is because there are some events, such as grand tours, where doping is a baseline requirement for competition.
Eddy Merckx once said, laughingly, "It isn't cakes that are bad for your health, it's the climbs." And Lance Armstrong came closer to speaking honestly than he possibly ever has when he said, "The Tour de France is like running a marathon every day for three weeks."
If we want to have a hope of honest (i.e. dope-free) racing, we first of all need to have events that are feasible from a physiological standpoint without dope. Three week races that consist of lengthy stages, many of them in high mountains, with multiple mountain passes, are not such events. I would argue that it's time for a re-think, and a reset, with regard to grand tours.
We don't have a "Tour of USA" because the country is too damn big for it, but we still have races. For that matter, and in keeping with the idea of "ever closer union", why not institute a "Tour of Europe"? Obviously such a tour would need to occur in a different locale each year. Similarly, who says the Tour de France has to traverse the length and breadth of the country? Why not pick a different region each year? Transfers would still be needed, but they needn't be terribly long.
The only reason the grand tours are as they are today is because they are descended from Henri Desgrange's creation. And as we know his rather sadistic idea was to have something so long and brutal that, ideally, only one rider would even finish. Maybe it's time to leave Henri in the past, at least in this regard.
Instead of an average stage length of, say, 180 kms, why not 50, 60, 70 kms? Instead of four or five mountain passes, why not one or two? Instead of four or five hours of racing a day, why not one or one and a half? The excitement would be just as great, and it would be a lot easier to televise.
If we expect riders to do these events competitively, and demand of them that they do it dope-free, we need to first of all ensure we're not setting them an unrealistic task.
...
So, essentially, Unipublic are on the right track? They're shortening stages, removing mid-stage climbs to a large extent so that everything you need to see can be compressed into the last 60-90 minutes of televised racing, cycling for the youtube generation. And because those shorter, easier stages don't open up gaps, they end up following the same format over and over to try to ensure there is at least some action every day. And they, rightly, get dragged over the coals for it. Part of the reason we get action in the races we have is the tired legs that we wouldn't have if they're racing less than half the distance. A short stage is ok as a change of pace and maybe there should be more of them to bring total distances down, but we've seen from people like Christophe Bassons that the current format isn't as unrealistic as seems to be thought; certainly not so that it requires a shortening to the extent you're talking about. I'm seeing the same trend happening in cross-country skiing and it's horrible there, the traditional distance specialist is being marginalized in favour of sprint races which regularly are crash-filled lotteries; the distances are regularly being cut so that there is no reason for an aspiring youngster to want to be a classic style skier, you can make more coin doing the part of the sport that should be a once-in-a-while carnival attraction. It hasn't helped the sport in the slightest - it's still as dirty as it ever was, and the increasingly short courses are causing designers to find the same solutions to ensuring gaps, leading to an ever smaller number of athletes at the front and increasingly samey racing. There's little to no scope for races-within-the-race, and when they try to do mini-Tours and Tours, the amount of time bonuses given away in order to create some GC interest make it seem completely artificial and ridiculous. I'd hate to see the same kind of development in cycling.Maxiton said:I'd hate it, too. What you describe is not what I have in mind.
It's true that riders today dope for short stages and one-day races, but that's because doping is endemic in the culture and history of the sport. Part of the reason it's endemic is because there are some events, such as grand tours, where doping is a baseline requirement for competition.
Eddy Merckx once said, laughingly, "It isn't cakes that are bad for your health, it's the climbs." And Lance Armstrong came closer to speaking honestly than he possibly ever has when he said, "The Tour de France is like running a marathon every day for three weeks."
If we want to have a hope of honest (i.e. dope-free) racing, we first of all need to have events that are feasible from a physiological standpoint without dope. Three week races that consist of lengthy stages, many of them in high mountains, with multiple mountain passes, are not such events. I would argue that it's time for a re-think, and a reset, with regard to grand tours.
We don't have a "Tour of USA" because the country is too damn big for it, but we still have races. For that matter, and in keeping with the idea of "ever closer union", why not institute a "Tour of Europe"? Obviously such a tour would need to occur in a different locale each year. Similarly, who says the Tour de France has to traverse the length and breadth of the country? Why not pick a different region each year? Transfers would still be needed, but they needn't be terribly long.
The only reason the grand tours are as they are today is because they are descended from Henri Desgrange's creation. And as we know his rather sadistic idea was to have something so long and brutal that, ideally, only one rider would even finish. Maybe it's time to leave Henri in the past, at least in this regard.
Instead of an average stage length of, say, 180 kms, why not 50, 60, 70 kms? Instead of four or five mountain passes, why not one or two? Instead of four or five hours of racing a day, why not one or one and a half? The excitement would be just as great, and it would be a lot easier to televise.
If we expect riders to do these events competitively, and demand of them that they do it dope-free, we need to first of all ensure we're not setting them an unrealistic task.
Part of the reason it's endemic is because there are some events, such as grand tours, where doping is a baseline requirement for competition.
SeriousSam said:Part of the reason it's endemic is because there are some events, such as grand tours, where doping is a baseline requirement for competition.
That would be compelling if it weren't for the fact that doping is just as endemic in other sports and other events where the notion of doping being a baseline requirement for competition doesn't fly.
Success in sport is about relative performance, not absolute performance. It doesn't matter how hard the task is in an absolute sense, it's enough to be better than the others. The incentive to dope is just as strong for shorter races as it is for longer, harder ones.
Libertine Seguros said:So, essentially, Unipublic are on the right track? They're shortening stages, removing mid-stage climbs to a large extent so that everything you need to see can be compressed into the last 60-90 minutes of televised racing, cycling for the youtube generation. And because those shorter, easier stages don't open up gaps, they end up following the same format over and over to try to ensure there is at least some action every day. And they, rightly, get dragged over the coals for it. Part of the reason we get action in the races we have is the tired legs that we wouldn't have if they're racing less than half the distance. A short stage is ok as a change of pace and maybe there should be more of them to bring total distances down, but we've seen from people like Christophe Bassons that the current format isn't as unrealistic as seems to be thought; certainly not so that it requires a shortening to the extent you're talking about. I'm seeing the same trend happening in cross-country skiing and it's horrible there, the traditional distance specialist is being marginalized in favour of sprint races which regularly are crash-filled lotteries; the distances are regularly being cut so that there is no reason for an aspiring youngster to want to be a classic style skier, you can make more coin doing the part of the sport that should be a once-in-a-while carnival attraction. It hasn't helped the sport in the slightest - it's still as dirty as it ever was, and the increasingly short courses are causing designers to find the same solutions to ensuring gaps, leading to an ever smaller number of athletes at the front and increasingly samey racing. There's little to no scope for races-within-the-race, and when they try to do mini-Tours and Tours, the amount of time bonuses given away in order to create some GC interest make it seem completely artificial and ridiculous. I'd hate to see the same kind of development in cycling.
Netserk said:Maxiton, do you think LeMond was clean? If it was possible to win the Tour without dope, then it is quite obvious that it isn't a requirement. The routes back then were harder than they are now, and I dare say a lot of riders were able to complete the whole route without chemical assistance. Since then, it has become harder to compete clean, but that is not because of the route, it's because everyone else is going faster (with doping). If you had the race with 180 riders, *where every single one of them were clean*, then surely they wouldn't go faster than what they would be able to sustain? It would be a race with many finishers and just as many winners, but they would just go *slower*.
If you don't believe LeMond was clean, do you think there's a single rider who completed the Tour last year that was clean? If one can do it, while keeping up with a dopes peloton, why shouldn't many be able to do so, if they only had to keep up with clean riders?
sniper said:But the point is: their cases have little to no bearing on the question of whether Lemond or Hampsten doped or not. We can't, technically, proof that any of them was clean, and so using their cases as proof that Lemond or Hampsten were clean is a circular argument by nature.
Libertine Seguros said:So, essentially, Unipublic are on the right track? They're shortening stages, removing mid-stage climbs to a large extent so that everything you need to see can be compressed into the last 60-90 minutes of televised racing, cycling for the youtube generation. And because those shorter, easier stages don't open up gaps, they end up following the same format over and over to try to ensure there is at least some action every day. And they, rightly, get dragged over the coals for it. Part of the reason we get action in the races we have is the tired legs that we wouldn't have if they're racing less than half the distance. A short stage is ok as a change of pace and maybe there should be more of them to bring total distances down, but we've seen from people like Christophe Bassons that the current format isn't as unrealistic as seems to be thought; certainly not so that it requires a shortening to the extent you're talking about. I'm seeing the same trend happening in cross-country skiing and it's horrible there, the traditional distance specialist is being marginalized in favour of sprint races which regularly are crash-filled lotteries; the distances are regularly being cut so that there is no reason for an aspiring youngster to want to be a classic style skier, you can make more coin doing the part of the sport that should be a once-in-a-while carnival attraction. It hasn't helped the sport in the slightest - it's still as dirty as it ever was, and the increasingly short courses are causing designers to find the same solutions to ensuring gaps, leading to an ever smaller number of athletes at the front and increasingly samey racing. There's little to no scope for races-within-the-race, and when they try to do mini-Tours and Tours, the amount of time bonuses given away in order to create some GC interest make it seem completely artificial and ridiculous. I'd hate to see the same kind of development in cycling.Maxiton said:I'd hate it, too. What you describe is not what I have in mind.
It's true that riders today dope for short stages and one-day races, but that's because doping is endemic in the culture and history of the sport. Part of the reason it's endemic is because there are some events, such as grand tours, where doping is a baseline requirement for competition.
Eddy Merckx once said, laughingly, "It isn't cakes that are bad for your health, it's the climbs." And Lance Armstrong came closer to speaking honestly than he possibly ever has when he said, "The Tour de France is like running a marathon every day for three weeks."
If we want to have a hope of honest (i.e. dope-free) racing, we first of all need to have events that are feasible from a physiological standpoint without dope. Three week races that consist of lengthy stages, many of them in high mountains, with multiple mountain passes, are not such events. I would argue that it's time for a re-think, and a reset, with regard to grand tours.
We don't have a "Tour of USA" because the country is too damn big for it, but we still have races. For that matter, and in keeping with the idea of "ever closer union", why not institute a "Tour of Europe"? Obviously such a tour would need to occur in a different locale each year. Similarly, who says the Tour de France has to traverse the length and breadth of the country? Why not pick a different region each year? Transfers would still be needed, but they needn't be terribly long.
The only reason the grand tours are as they are today is because they are descended from Henri Desgrange's creation. And as we know his rather sadistic idea was to have something so long and brutal that, ideally, only one rider would even finish. Maybe it's time to leave Henri in the past, at least in this regard.
Instead of an average stage length of, say, 180 kms, why not 50, 60, 70 kms? Instead of four or five mountain passes, why not one or two? Instead of four or five hours of racing a day, why not one or one and a half? The excitement would be just as great, and it would be a lot easier to televise.
If we expect riders to do these events competitively, and demand of them that they do it dope-free, we need to first of all ensure we're not setting them an unrealistic task.
sniper said:good post Echoes. I agree on many points.
Interesting what you say about the rumor predominating in the Belgian scene.
In addition we've heard Boogerd say the same, and the anonymous Dutch whistleblower in that newspaper article posted by Fearless Greg Lemond. And of course Lance Armstrong said "everybody knows you used epo", in a private conversation with Lemond. So clearly the rumor wasn't limited to the Belgian scene, but sure, I would agree it seems to have predominated and perhaps originated in the Belgian scene.
My position wrt the "everybody dopes" question would sound something like this:
It's rather simple actually: the higher up the performance chain, the more likely that a given rider is doping. So sure, in amateur cycling you're gonna find plenty of clean riders. In pro-cycling much less.
I think in the protour teams the majority of riders are doped, or have doped.
In my book, fwiw, the top 50, maybe top 100, of any GC is on EPO (or a derivation of it), HGH and other things. Further down the ranks you might find the odd 'clean' guy who's not doing epo and hgh but only tramadol and ooc cortisone.
When I say "can't prove he was clean", i merely mean that even when we think a rider was/is clean, we should leave room some room for scepticism. That's a logical attitude considering the fact that
(a) dope is so easy to come by and the testing is so easily circumvented; and
(b) riders and people with a stake in cycling will normally say anything to protect their own interests
Don't pin this on me. I'm just echo-ing a rumor that seems to have been circulating in the Belgian/Dutch/American cycling scene. Whether that rumor is right or wrong is another question, but that anonymous whistleblower in that Dutch newspaper article certainly confirmed it.Oldermanish said:...
Lemond's training partners during that era would say you're wrong.
Considering Lemond's medical profile (kidney + anemia patient, i.e. perfect for EPO) and his closeness to known Dutch/Belgian EPO users of the time, I don't see any apriori reason to dismiss the rumor.There may have been some old-fashioned "recovery aids" purchased from the Ensendada drugstores while they trained down there but Epo wouldn't have been one of them.
We've discussed this many times, but since you bring it up i'll repeat it: Lemond was one of the first (if not the first) pro to insist on bringing his wife to GTs. In addition, his father in law David Morris was a regular part of his entourage during GTs. Now, Morris was an immunologist and ex-surgeon. Morris' daughter, Lemond's wife, in turn, was a nurse who had previously worked for her father's immunology practice.He may not have been an absolute angel but he wasn't a mastermind on that account.
